Two New Bonus Offers Earn 137,000 AAdvantage Miles

The Citi / AAdvantage Platinum Select MasterCard is now offering 60,000 bonus American Airlines miles after spending $3,000 in the first 3 months. We’ve seen this offer before on the personal card. Citi rotates in a out a couple times of year typically.

The CitiBusiness / AAdvantage Platinum Select World MasterCard is offering 70,000 bonus American Airlines miles after spending $4,000 on the card in the first three months. I’ve never seen the bonus that high for this card.

With the spending it takes to unlock each bonus, you’ll have at least 137,000 American Airlines miles if you open both cards.

The standard offer for each is 30,000 AAdvantage miles for spending $1,000 on each and the standard “elevated offer” we see on each is 50k for $3k spend. So 60k for $3k spend is great, and 70k for $4k spend is even better. Both are limited time offers. You are only eligible to earn the sign up bonus on the personal card as long as you haven’t opened or closed the same card, or a Citi / AAdvantage Executive World Elite MasterCard, within the last 24 months. You are eligible to earn the sign up bonus on the business card as long as you haven’t opened or closed the same card within the last 24 months.

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The offer for the CitiBusiness / AAdvantage Platinum Select World MasterCard is practically the same, except there is no 10% rebate of redeemed miles, there are business-related category bonuses, and the retention bonus is different.

Quick Facts

Sign Up Bonus: 70,000 bonus American Airlines miles after spending $4,000 on the card within three months of opening the account

Category Bonuses: 2 American Airlines miles for every dollar spent on American Airlines purchases, telecommunications merchants, car rental merchants, and gas stations

First checked bag is free on domestic American Airlines flights for the cardholder and four others on the same reservation

Preferred Boarding on domestic American Airlines flights

25% off of in-flight food and beverages purchased on the card

Anniversary Retention Bonus:If you spend $30,000 in a year on the card, you also get a $99 companion certificate for use within the continental United States.

Delta miles cannot even book international First Class. You can see comparisons of American Airlines, Delta, and United award charts here. Just note that SAAver level (the cheapest) award space on American Airlines has gotten thinner and thinner over time, so it could be a good idea to look into your desired award space if you’re getting the card to put the bonus towards a specific trip.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, American Airlines miles are also good for economy awards too. American features off peak dates with cheap economy awards to:

Category Bonuses

The personal card has two new category bonuses. You will also earn 2 miles per dollar spent at restaurants and gas stations.

The business card offers 2x on purchases at telecommunications and car rental merchants as well as gas stations.

Internet, cable, and phone services is a 3x category on the Ink Business Preferred, and 5x on the Ink Business Cash, so if you have one of those cards, put those purchases on it. Car rentals and gas (all travel and gas) are 3x categories on the Citi ThankYou Premier Card, so use that instead of CitiBusiness card for car rental and gas purchases. If you don’t have those cards, these 2x category bonuses are nice.

Anniversary Retention Bonus

Both bonuses are only granted if you opt to keep your card open for at least 45 days post cardmember anniversary.

Spending $20,000 within a year of opening the personal card will get you a $100 Flight Discount on American Airlines flights. You’ll have a year to use the certificate before it expires.

Spending $30,000 in a year on the business card will get you a $99 companion certificate for use within the continental United States. That means you can choose companion to join you on a domestic, roundtrip economy ticket for just $99 + taxes/fees (an additional $21.60 to $43.20).

Free Checked Bag

Cardholders get a free checked bag on domestic American Airlines flights (everyone gets a free checked bag on international flights), and up to four companions on the same reservation get the same benefit. Since the first checked bag normally costs $25, a family of five could clean up with this benefit, saving $250 per roundtrip.

Preferred Boarding

Since all the airlines started charging for checked bags, more people are carrying on big roll-a-boards that need to go in the overhead bin. When those fill up, you have to surrender your carry on for a dreaded “gate check”, which entails waiting around for 15 extra minutes to get the bag at baggage claim and losing access to everything in your bag during the flight.

Both cards get you “Preferred Boarding” on domestic American Airlines flight, so you will have a better chance of securing overhead bin space and avoid gate checking. Preferred boarding technically means Group 5, after Business, First Class, and passengers with status. Preferred boarding does not apply on codeshare flights, only those operated by American Airlines.

10% Rebate on Awards

This is a benefit of the Citi / AAdvantage Platinum Select MasterCard but not the CitiBusiness / AAdvantage Platinum Select World MasterCard. You will receive a 10% rebate on the miles used to book American Airlines awards–up to 10,000 miles rebated per calendar year.

That means a 45,000 mile off peak roundtrip to Europe is only 40,500 miles net. An 80,000 mile award in Cathay Pacific First Class to Japan one way would be 72,000 miles net.

A cardholder who redeems 100,000 American Airlines miles each year gets back 10,000 American Airlines miles. The process is automatic and the rebate posts within a few weeks. I value this benefit at $140 if you get the full 10,000 miles rebated, which is a justification for keeping the card open long term ($140 > $95 annual fee).

Reduced Mileage Awards

Both cards give you access to American Airline’s Reduced Mileage Awards, which are discounts on domestic redemptions. Destinations for the discounts are posted quarterly.

Eligibility

You are only eligible to earn a sign up bonus if you haven’t opened or closed a card from the same type (brand or co-brand) within the last 24 months. For example, if you’ve opened or closed the personal Citi AAdvantage card in the last 24 months, you are not eligible for another. Luckily the CitiBusiness card is a separate product in this regard, so a separate 24 month clock applies to it. You can sign up for both as long as you haven’t opened or closed either (respectively) in the last 24 months.

As long you follow the above rule, you can be approved and receive the bonus on the Citi / AAdvantage Platinum Select MasterCard even if you have had one before/currently still have it open. However, the same does not apply to the CitiBusiness card. You must close that card before opening another one (and of course, wait 24 months after closing it to be eligible for another).

You will not be approved if you have any Citi credit card applications in the last 8 days or two Citi applications in the last 65 days. So if you want both of these Citi cards, get them on days 1 and 9. If you want a third Citi card, wait until day 66.

Anyone who has a business including a sole proprietor can apply for business cards. Read more about how to get approved for business cards if you’re not sure if you’re eligible. Your business doesn’t need to be bringing in boatloads of revenue, you don’t need an Employee Identification Number (just use your social security number instead), and you don’t even need other employees besides yourself.

Getting Matched

If you signed up for lower sign up offer within the last 90 days, Citi has a pretty good track record of matching sign up bonuses to what’s currently available. Call the number on the back of your card or send a secure message through your online account–the sooner the better. I’ve seen various data points around the web confirming matches to the new offers.

Bottom Line

Both AAdvantage co-branded Citi cards (the personal and business cards) have temporarily elevated sign up bonuses at the moment. You’ll get 60,000 bonus American Airlines miles after spending $3,000 in the first three months for the personal card, and 70,000 bonus miles for spending $4,000 on the business card.

Both cards also come with other valuable benefits if you fly American often, like a free checked bag, priority boarding, and access to Reduced Mileage Awards. The annual fee of $95 is waived the first 12 months.

If you’re sniping business cards with good offers that won’t count against you for the purpose of Chase’s 5/24 rule, the CitiBusiness / AAdvantage card should be high on your radar… I’ve never seen the bonus this high for that card.

Editorial Disclaimer: The editorial content is not provided or commissioned by the credit card issuers. Opinions expressed here are author’s alone, not those of the credit card issuers, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the credit card issuers.

The comments section below is not provided or commissioned by the bank advertiser. Responses have not been reviewed, approved, or otherwise endorsed by the bank advertiser. It is not the bank advertiser’s responsibility to ensure all questions are answered.

Sarah Page Maxwell became a miles nerd after moving her base to Buenos Aires and beginning a transient lifestyle that would be otherwise too expensive without miles and points. In addition to travel, her other passions include hot sauce, yoga, and her boston terrier Omar.

Hi Sarah, Can you confirm that this “new” Citi AA personal card does really still get a 10% mileage redemption rebate. That “perk” is not listed on the application website, only access to reduced mileage awards. I posted this question on One Mile at a Time two days ago but it remains unanswered. Thanks!

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Sarah Page Maxwell is a miles aficionado and avid traveler, born in Virginia, raised in North Carolina, and currently based in Buenos Aires, Argentina. She has earned and redeemed millions of miles for herself and others. Traveling for free, the 29-year-old has been to 20+ countries, making sure to catch as many sunsets in each that she can.

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Many of the credit card offers that appear on this site are from credit card companies from which MileValue.com receives compensation if you are approved. Compensation impacts placement of cards on the credit card page and banner placement, but does not on the articles posted on MileValue.com. This site does not include all credit card offers available in the marketplace.

Many of the credit card offers that appear on this site are from credit card companies from which MileValue.com receives compensation if you are approved. Compensation impacts placement of cards on the credit card page and banner placement, but does not on the articles posted on MileValue.com. This site does not include all credit card offers available in the marketplace.